Curt Heinrich von Einsiedel

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Curt Heinrich von Einsiedel , modernized Kurt Heinrich von Einsiedel , (* March 11 / March 22, 1662 at Scharfenstein Castle ; † May 23, 1712 in Dresden ) was a royal Polish and electoral Saxon secret council , chamberlain , also chamberlain and Bergrat and Herr on Weißbach and Dittersdorf.

Life

Curt Hildebrand belonged to the Einsiedel family . Heinrich Hildebrand von Einsiedel (1622–1675), electoral Saxon secret council, president of the court of appeal, director of the landscape of the principality of Saxony-Altenburg and gentleman on Scharfenstein, Weißbach and Lumpzig, was his father. Agnesa Eleonora, née von Schönberg, daughter of Rittmeister Abraham von Schönberg auf Frauenstein in the Erzgebirge , was his mother.

He was initially taught by private tutors. After his father died in 1675, he was sent to Zeitz in 1675 to see Chancellor Veit Ludwig von Seckendorff , where he lived for four years. After studying at Leipzig University, like his father, he embarked on an administrative career in the service of the Elector of Saxony and later King of Poland.

He became a close confidante of Wolf Dietrich von Beichlingen . When he fell out of favor at the Dresden court in 1703, Einsiedel was also arrested without a trial, from which he was only released in 1707. He then withdrew from all public offices on his possessions.

After he died in 1712, the Annaberg Superintendent Andreas Kunandus held a memorial sermon for Curt Heinrich von Einsiedel on July 24, 1712 in the church in Dittersdorf, which was published by Johann Heinrich Schwenck in Dresden.

family

Curt Heinrich von Einsiedel was married to Magdalena Sibylla Marschall von Bieberstein since 1691 . The only son of the same name, Curt Heinrich von Einsiedel, emerged from this marriage.

literature

  • Andreas Kunadus: "Power and strength of words full of faith", Alt-Dresden, Johann Heinrich Schwenck, 1712
  • Steffen Scholtz: The message of the weather vane of the Dittersdorf church. In memory of Curt Heinrich von Einsiedel (1662–1712). In: Family and History 24 (2015), Heft 1, pp. 385–394.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Andreas Kunadus: "Safft and Power of Faithful Words", Alt-Dresden, Johann Heinrich Schwenck, 1712